DHS site switches to Linux.  Note there is no comment as to whether it is related to recent SQL woes.

By Wilson P.  Dizard III
Government Computer News
January 27, 2003

http://www.Government Computer
News.com/vol1_no1/daily-updates/21000-1.html

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) last weekend switched its Web
site over to Oracle software running under Linux, according to Web
consulting company Netcraft.

Netcraft, based in Bath, England, offers a service called What's That
Site Running? that tracks assigned names and numbers for Web sites.  The
service provides details on the software that operates Web sites and
statistics on the operations of some sites.

According to Netcraft, the department's site, at www.dhs.gov, began
operating with JRun Web Server under Windows 2000 on July 11.  The
Office of Personnel Management hosted the site.  JRun is a product of
Macromedia Inc. of San Francisco.

After some changes earlier this month, the site resumed running JRun Web
Server under Windows 2000 on January 18.

On January 24 and 25, www.dhs.gov switched to Oracle HTTP Server running
under Linux, according to Netcraft.  The site is hosted by Energis
Squared Managed Web Server Network of Leeds, England.

The DHS Web makeover coincided with this weekend's outbreak of an SQL
worm worldwide, which affected Microsoft systems that have not been
properly patched.  Department officials were not available for comment
on the motives for the change.

In Netcraft's routine sampling of the uptime of the dhs.gov server, it
reported that the maximum period between reboots under Windows 2000 was
34.3 days and the most recent period was 3.26 days.

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